INDE X. N. B. To find any particular Book, or PAMPHLET, see the TABLE of CONTENTS, prefixed to the Volume. A A. CTING, proper and improper, characterised, 517. ACTIONS, their merit or demerit, when most confpicuous, 394. ACTORS in Dublin, Criticism on, in the character of a Frenchman, 157. ADDISON and Swift, their Genuifes diftinguished, 414. ADVERSITY, an Ode to, 324. ALE-houfe-Keeper near Inlington, ftory of, 4.2. ALEXANDER VI. Pope, pleafant BALL, Dr. a detection of fe ftory relating to, 43. ANTHONY, Mark, his character, 536. AQUILEIA, fiege of, a fcene in, 222. ARIMASPI, and the Griffins, Plíny's account of, 318. Probable refolution of that fable, 319. ARMY in America, project for the difpofal of, when difbanded at a Peace, 509. ASSURANCE-Office, for Lives, benefit of, 206. veral unacknowleged paffages in his Praice of Phyfic taken from Dr. Shaw, 130. BEAST in the Revelations, his number made out, 526. BIOGRAPHY, why the most entertaining part of historical compofition, 117. BLEEDING, its advantages in Inflammations of membranous parts, 200. BUCCANEERS of St. Domingo, fome account of, 89. Their method of hunting, 91. CAESAR, C C. CONCERT, poetical reprefenta tion of a good one, 2:2. AESAR, Julius, his charac- CONQUEST by William the Nor ter, 535 CALMUCKS, fome account of that people, 320. CANADA, whence that country derives its name, 83. Englith account of its Limits, and a defcription of the country, ibid. and Guadaloupe, comparative eltimate of their worth to Britain, 433.. CANADIANS, their cuftoms in courtship and marriage, 86. CAPE-Breton, Entertainments of the Savages there, defcribed, 363. The eloquent acknowlegements of the guets, 364 Their method of making war, 368. Their courtship and marriages, 370. CARTER-Lane Meeting, admo nitory Addrefs to the Gentlemen of, 78. CEBES, the compofition of the picture defcribed in his celebrated Dialogue, 112. CHARACTERS afcribed to our defined, 550. Medical man, long confidered as an Epoch, 37. CONVERSATION, religious, the advantages of, 97. CORPULENCY Remedy for, ibid. cafe of, ibid. CREATION, order and beauty of, 20. CRITICAL Admirers,, more ho nourable to a work, than implicit ones, 119. CROMWELL, Oliver, his arbitrary method of compofing his Parliament, 374. Whitlocke's fpeech on the propofal to make him King, 376. Compared with his former fentiments on this point, 379. His behaviour in relation to the furrender. of Dunkirk, 381. -, Richard, instance of his want of policy, 385. The terms of his refignation, ibid. D. Saviour, what intended to fig- DARIUS, the durationdition CHARLES of Sweden, fome anec- tions on, 392. of that calamitous time, 411. CLERGY, reafon why they are not more refpected, 558. CLOCKS and Watches, agents of debauchery. against the Scythians, deter DEMONIACS in the Gospel, per- dramatic poem, 137. DIALOGUE, why the English are lefs fuccefsful than the French in that fpecies of compofition, 4c9. Doc ment pointed out, 542. and Common Law, ESTABLISHMENTS, Religious, existence as a material element. and Light, their effential FIRING, in the military, hints 494. &c. depraved, and why, 413. 217. FUNDAMENTAL Doctrines, the G. AMING Table, flight view Pot, I of heated metals, GAT the caufe of, fuggefted, 9. GENEROSITY defined, 39. HANDEL, Mr. account of the first manifeftations of his viewers, 554. verfity of Oxford, 179. His flections on, 115. refemble an epic poem, 115. the rule which denies a lineal poetical version of, 245. JUSTICE of God, the natural evidence of, 21. An enquiry L. HONOUR and refpect due to the LAKE, remarkable infiance of opulent, in certain circum- an unfathomable one, dif- M 416. M. ACHIAVEL, ftrictures upon MANKIND, abfurdity of fig- their proper |